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My second favorite old school Universal horror, right behind Frankenstein. It's incredible how well the movie holds up to this day.

So many great lines, and the scenes with Rains terrorizing the townspeople are hilarious. I still laugh my ass off when he knocks over the baby stroller.

It's great.

I can't believe how amazing it looks, even the BluRay, there is only a small amount of scenes, where you can see a SMALL outline of the man. In most he is still completely invisible. It's so crazy how they did it.

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This one is very underrated and overlooked as everyone blows their wad on Dracula, The Wolfman and Frankenstein. Claude Raines is terrifying and hilarious in this, and for an old film the effects are very well done and still hold up today.

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I can't believe how amazing it looks, even the BluRay, there is only a small amount of scenes, where you can see a SMALL outline of the man. In most he is still completely invisible. It's so crazy how they did it.

How did they do it? When I was watching it, I was amazed! A great film!

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Yes! I think that's what I love most about any practical effect. It's like watching a magician and thinking," How did they do that?"

Very much in agreement. They could make an Invisible Man movie tomorrow and we'd mostly take it for granted that the special effects had been created via PC magic. We wouldn't really give the creation of those modern effects any thought whatsoever.

But these older films? I just love the idea that, one day, the director went up to the special effects guys and said, "This movie needs a scene where an invisible man rides a bicycle" and then they had to come up with practical ways to make it a reality. I admire the inventiveness, the combination of ways in which they achieved those scenes.

Mayhem. In a boilersuit.

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This one is very underrated and overlooked as everyone blows their wad on Dracula, The Wolfman and Frankenstein. Claude Raines is terrifying and hilarious in this, and for an old film the effects are very well done and still hold up today.

This and Black Lagoon are my fave Universal Horror movies.

Frankenstein is my favorite followed by The Wolfman then Black Lagoon. Personally I don't rate Dracula too highly and neither do many critics but everyone remembers and praises its legacy.

But these older films? I just love the idea that, one day, the director went up to the special effects guys and said, "This movie needs a scene where an invisible man rides a bicycle" and then they had to come up with practical ways to make it a reality. I admire the inventiveness, the combination of ways in which they achieved those scenes.

Yeah practical effects are like watching a magic trick. When he unwraps the bandages revealing his invisibility I still held the wonderment the audiences must have had back in the day.